Quick question about what this means
mkman123
Posts: 6,849 ✭✭✭✭
I've noticed sometimes on BST when someone is selling morgans, what do they mean when the coin is a AU slider? What is sliders???
Thanks!
Thanks!
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"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
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of circulation and is an AU would be considered a slider. Not just quite MS and
just slides under MS.
bob
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<< <i>a slider is a pitch halfway between a curveball and a fastball. A slider breaks laterally and down, with more speed than a curveball but less speed than a fastball. The break on the pitch is shorter than that of a curveball. The release technique of a slider is between a curveball and a fastball. The slider is similar to the cutter, a pitch which is thrown as a fastball, but differs in the sense that a slider tends to be more of a breaking ball. >>
Wiki......
I knew it would happen.
<< <i>A slider is a coin that an unscrupulous seller might be able to slide past a novice collector as a higher grade coin than it really is. >>
and also might mean a coin that could grade as an au one one submission and then as a 61-62 on the next
Sliders have also been used to proclaim that they came from collectors display drawers. Opening and closing the drawers causes a rub to appear on the coin. Sounds plausible at least to a novice buyer.
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